Brookfield consortium kick-starts bid to privatize slumping real estate unit
Brookfield Asset Management Inc. and a group of investors have offered to acquire the stake in Brookfield Property Partners that they don't already own, in a US$5.9-billion bid to take the real estate company private.
The Canadian alternative-asset manager said it has made a proposal to acquire the outstanding units for US$16.50 each, or about a 14-percent premium to Thursday's closing price in New York. Brookfield
Asset Management already owns about 60 per cent of Brookfield Property Partners, which had a market value of US$13.8 billion as of Thursday's close.
Units of Brookfield Property Partners jumped as much as 18 per cent to as high as US$17.14 apiece in New York trading Monday, after an earlier Bloomberg News report.
Privatizing Brookfield's real estate subsidiary is appealing because it has consistently traded at a discount to the underlying value of its assets, Nick Goodman,
Brookfield Asset Management's chief financial officer, said in an interview.
“We believe that it has been consistently discounted for more than just the past year,” Goodman said. “We believed it would be a premium offering to the market given it has a unique global portfolio and some of the highest quality real estate in the world. But it has consistently struggled to trade at its net asset value.”
While Brookfield Property Partners traded at all-time lows in
March, near the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, Brookfield waited until the unit price had stabilized to push ahead with the privatization effort, Goodman said.
The stock also trades at a discount because a lot of the company's value has been created through the development of long-term projects like New York's Manhattan West, part of the Hudson Yards redevelopment, Goodman added. Such projects can take years to start generating returns for investors. “We've just built more conviction over time that the right form for this is in the private markets,” he said.
Under the proposal, investors in Brookfield Property Partners can either elect to take the US$16.50 per unit in cash, or instead choose 0.4 of Brookfield Asset Management's stock, or 0.66 of Brookfield Property's preferred units. Holders of Class A stock in Brookfield's other publicly traded real estate entity, Brookfield Property REIT Inc., can participate once they exchange their shares for Brookfield Property Partners units.
Brookfield Property Partners and Brookfield Property REIT acknowledged they had received the proposal in a separate statement Monday. Brookfield Property Partners has formed a special committee of independent directors to review the offer.
Any transaction would be subject to a vote requiring approval from the majority of minority holders, Goodman said.